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Pope: Mass on Feast of St. George [full text]

23/04/2013

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(Vatican Radio) “It is not possible to find Jesus outside the Church”: this was Pope
Francis’ message as he marked his name day, the Feast of St. George, this Tuesday
celebrating Mass in the Pauline Chapel with the Cardinals present in Rome. Emer McCarthy
reports:

In his homily, the Pope thanked the cardinals for coming to concelebrate
with him: "Thank you - he said - because I really feel welcomed by you". Commenting
on the readings of the day, the Holy Father highlighted three aspects of the Church:
Its missionary activity, born of persecution; the fact that it is a Mother Church
which gifts us the faith that is our identity and that you cannot find Jesus outside
of the Church; the joy of belonging to the Church bringing Jesus to others. In short
the joy of being an evangelizer:

Below we publish a Vatican Radio transcript
and translation of the Holy Father’s Homily for Mass with the Cardinals in the Pauline
Chapel.

I thank His Eminence, the Cardinal Dean, for his words: thank you
very much, Your Eminence, thank you.

I also thank all of you who wanted to
come today: Thank you. Because I feel welcomed by you. Thank you. I feel good with
you, and I like that.

The [first] reading today makes me think that the missionary
expansion of the Church began precisely at a time of persecution, and these Christians
went as far as Phoenicia, Cyprus and Antioch, and proclaimed the Word. They had this
apostolic fervor within them, and that is how the faith spread! Some, people of Cyprus
and Cyrene - not these, but others who had become Christians - went to Antioch and
began to speak to the Greeks too. It was a further step. And this is how the Church
moved forward. Whose was this initiative to speak to the Greeks? This was not clear
to anyone but the Jews. But ... it was the Holy Spirit, the One who prompted them
ever forward ... But some in Jerusalem, when they heard this, became 'nervous and
sent Barnabas on an "apostolic visitation": perhaps, with a little sense of humor
we could say that this was the theological beginning of the Doctrine of the Faith:
this apostolic visit by Barnabas. He saw, and he saw that things were going
well.

And so the Church was a Mother, the Mother of more children, of many
children. It became more and more of a Mother. A Mother who gives us the faith, a
Mother who gives us an identity. But the Christian identity is not an identity card:
Christian identity is belonging to the Church, because all of these belonged to the
Church, the Mother Church. Because it is not possible to find Jesus outside the Church.
The great Paul VI said: "Wanting to live with Jesus without the Church, following
Jesus outside of the Church, loving Jesus without the Church is an absurd dichotomy."
And the Mother Church that gives us Jesus gives us our identity that is not only a
seal, it is a belonging. Identity means belonging. This belonging to the Church is
beautiful.

And the third idea comes to my mind - the first was the explosion
of missionary activity; the second, the Mother Church - and the third, that when Barnabas
saw that crowd - the text says: " And a large number of people was added to the Lord"
- when he saw those crowds, he experienced joy. " When he arrived and saw the grace
of God, he rejoiced ": his is the joy of the evangelizer. It was, as Paul VI said,
"the sweet and comforting joy of evangelizing." And this joy begins with a persecution,
with great sadness, and ends with joy. And so the Church goes forward, as one Saint
says - I do not remember which one, here - "amid the persecutions of the world and
the consolations of the Lord." And thus is the life of the Church. If we want to travel
a little along the road of worldliness, negotiating with the world - as did the Maccabees,
who were tempted, at that time - we will never have the consolation of the Lord.
And if we seek only consolation, it will be a superficial consolation, not that of
the Lord: a human consolation. The Church's journey always takes place between the
Cross and the Resurrection, amid the persecutions and the consolations of the Lord.
And this is the path: those who go down this road are not mistaken.

Let us
think today about the missionary activity of the Church: these [people] came out of
themselves to go forth. Even those who had the courage to proclaim Jesus to the Greeks,
an almost scandalous thing at that time. Think of this Mother Church that grows, grows
with new children to whom She gives the identity of the faith, because you cannot
believe in Jesus without the Church. Jesus Himself says in the Gospel: " But you do
not believe, because you are not among my sheep." If we are not "sheep of Jesus,"
faith does not some to us. It is a rosewater faith, a faith without substance. And
let us think of the consolation that Barnabas felt, which is "the sweet and comforting
joy of evangelizing." And let us ask the Lord for this "parresia", this apostolic
fervor that impels us to move forward, as brothers, all of us forward! Forward, bringing
the name of Jesus in the bosom of Holy Mother Church, and, as St. Ignatius said, "hierarchical
and Catholic." So be it.